Sonic Youth has been documented by a host of ﬁlmmakers ranging from Jonas Mekas to Braden King, but the leading band of the No Wave movement has never been quite as expressively and thoroughly captured as by the high school crew behind “Sonic Youth: Sleeping Nights Awake.” The Reno-based students, loosed with their vid cameras by director-producer-
editor Michael Albright, form a solid unit in lensing the seminal band in top form during a July 4, 2006, gig at Reno’s Sierra Casino and Resort. Serious fest noise should resound for the rest of the year, followed by a cultish DVD reverb.

This is one of the most engaging and single-minded ﬁlm studies of a band since “Instrument,” Jem Cohen’s 1999 ﬁlm on Fugazi, and Cohen’s inﬂuence on the ﬁlmmaking is felt in several respects. For one, the cameras — as well as Albright’s choices as editor — pay far more attention to band members Thurston Moore (lead guitar, vocals), Kim Gordon (lead guitar, vocals), Lee Ranaldo (guitar, vocals), Steve Shelley (drums) and Mark Ibold (bass) than to the enthusiastic Reno audience. For another, the beautifully rendered black-and-white imagery layers the gig with a timeless mood that, like Cohen’s best music docs, will give pic a long-lasting impact.

Best of all, the music is uncompromised, full-bore Sonic Youth, a band distinguished by a rare gift for blending pop attitude with avant-garde taste and daring. Albright, having trained under Albert Maysles, shows that he’s learned (and imparted to his talented students) Maysles’ central documaking lesson, which is to always be ready to cover the moment with one’s camera and to do so without visual or narrative trickery.

Brief timeouts away from the stage show Moore, Gordon and Ranaldo, as unassuming and unpretentious as they’ve always been, comfortably and casually discussing their act, which combines some song-list planning with minimal preconception. Fortunately, the band and students clearly get along, and this simpatico makes for a smooth yet wide-ranging musical survey.
Albright’s editing is consistently intelligent and never ostentatious. Pic marks the second work by Project Moonshine, Albright’s ongoing mission to develop high schoolers into ﬁlmmakers in his native Reno.

Project Moonshine 2009

About Us

Project Moonshine is a non-profit organization designed to teach filmmaking skills to students by providing opportunities to document important events happening in their community. Started in 2006, Project Moonshine has made documentaries on a variety of subjects including, Sonic Youth, Califone, Tour de Nez, Artown, Nevada Beekeepers, Orchestra Baobab and Dada Motel. Although Project Moonshine is not exclusively based in Reno, Nevada, most of our projects focus on events happening in Northern Nevada. Over the years, Project Moonshine has flourished as an arts organization that combines a fresh approach to education, documentary production and civic engagement.